Dr. Ara B. Dopsis has an idea he thinks will be a boon to agriculture. He wants to create the 'pomato,' a hybrid between a tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) that has 12 chromosomes and a potato (Solanum tuberosum) that has 48 chromosomes. Dr. Dopsis is hoping his new pomato will have tuber growth like a potato and the fruit production of a tomato. He joins a haploid gamete from each species to form a hybrid and then induces doubling of chromosome number. How many chromosomes will the hybrid have before chromosome doubling?
Table of contents
- 1. Introduction to Genetics51m
- 2. Mendel's Laws of Inheritance3h 37m
- 3. Extensions to Mendelian Inheritance2h 41m
- 4. Genetic Mapping and Linkage2h 28m
- 5. Genetics of Bacteria and Viruses1h 21m
- 6. Chromosomal Variation1h 48m
- 7. DNA and Chromosome Structure56m
- 8. DNA Replication1h 10m
- 9. Mitosis and Meiosis1h 34m
- 10. Transcription1h 0m
- 11. Translation58m
- 12. Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes1h 19m
- 13. Gene Regulation in Eukaryotes44m
- 14. Genetic Control of Development44m
- 15. Genomes and Genomics1h 50m
- 16. Transposable Elements47m
- 17. Mutation, Repair, and Recombination1h 6m
- 18. Molecular Genetic Tools19m
- 19. Cancer Genetics29m
- 20. Quantitative Genetics1h 26m
- 21. Population Genetics50m
- 22. Evolutionary Genetics29m
6. Chromosomal Variation
Chromosomal Rearrangements: Duplications
Problem 1d
Textbook Question
How do we know that the mutant Bar-eye phenotype in Drosophila is due to a duplicated gene region rather than to a change in the nucleotide sequence of a gene?
Verified step by step guidance1
Understand the nature of the Bar-eye phenotype in Drosophila, which is characterized by a reduced number of facets in the compound eye, suggesting a structural change rather than a simple point mutation.
Review genetic and cytogenetic evidence: examine chromosome banding patterns under a microscope to detect duplications or rearrangements in the region associated with the Bar-eye phenotype.
Analyze genetic crosses and inheritance patterns; a duplication often shows dosage effects and can produce dominant phenotypes, whereas a point mutation typically behaves differently in inheritance.
Use molecular techniques such as Southern blotting or DNA sequencing to compare the mutant and wild-type alleles; if the nucleotide sequence is unchanged but the gene copy number is increased, this supports duplication.
Consider gene dosage effects: increased gene copy number from duplication leads to overexpression, which correlates with the Bar-eye phenotype, whereas a nucleotide change would alter gene function without changing copy number.
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Key Concepts
Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.
Gene Duplication
Gene duplication occurs when a segment of DNA containing a gene is copied one or more times in the genome. This can lead to increased gene dosage and altered phenotypes, such as the Bar-eye in Drosophila, where extra copies of a gene region cause changes in eye shape.
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Duplications
Mutation Types: Structural vs. Sequence Changes
Mutations can involve changes in the DNA sequence (point mutations) or structural changes like duplications, deletions, or inversions. Distinguishing between these helps identify whether a phenotype arises from altered gene function or gene copy number.
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Point Mutations
Genetic and Cytogenetic Evidence
Techniques such as genetic mapping, complementation tests, and cytogenetic analysis (e.g., chromosome banding or in situ hybridization) can reveal duplications by showing extra chromosomal material or altered gene dosage, differentiating duplication from simple nucleotide changes.
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Descriptive Genetics
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